We are done with 655. But seeing as we were basically cooked right out of the gate, I’m going to call hanging in for nearly a year a success. To be truthful, the real challenge that we inherited with this book was living up to the beautiful work that Kieron et al had done previously and the amazing reader energy that had been generated.

If all that had happened with our ten issues was to extend the influence of the astonishing Valerio Schiti, that would have been enough. As it is, I’m so proud of what Valerio, Jordie, Clayton, Pepe and I put on the page under Lauren and Jake’s fearless leadership. I’m also thrilled to have been able to write Sif as a fierce warrior and a lovable dork. I hope she finds a new home somewhere with a lot of things to say and a lot of things to kill.

Thanks for reading.

It’s sad to read because this has been one of the best women centric books Marvel has released and it really hasn’t disappointed either. This leaves fans of the female series with one less to turn to, but if anything it shows that fans need to give books like this a chance because they are quality and need the chance to shine.

Siphen is the Comic Editor at Analog Addiction where he writes all things comics and comic related(especially if X-Men). Also follow him on Twitter @Siphen0.

I’m so disappointed about this. First Red She-Hulk, now JiM. And Captain Marvel has piss-poor sales, too (though I don’t know how it’s doing in digital sales). Why is it that Marvel fans are so unwilling to read a female solo title? DC has 5 of them in top 100, but Marvel doesn’t have any. They’re great, well-written books, with great characters, and great art. So why aren’t people reading them? JiM looked gorgeous, and had a great mix of humour, drama and action. But the sales were terrible. Apparently, people would rather read a piece of crap series like Deadpool, one of the worst books Marvel’s put out in a long time.